The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism

Purpose: This study aims to reveal how ISIS exploits apocalyptic prophecies stated in the Qur’an and hadiths to find new recruits and legitimize its ideology. The study tries to identify how sensitive issues of Islam are misinterpreted to mislead and terrorize young Muslims. It also elucidates how...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: İbrahim Karataş
Format: Article
Language:Arabic
Published: Qatar University Press 2021-06-01
Series:مجلة كلية الشريعة والدراسات الإسلامية
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.qu.edu.qa/index.php/sharia/article/view/1853
id doaj-7654eb5064944a93aa77f6004b9f8a96
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7654eb5064944a93aa77f6004b9f8a962021-09-07T10:56:10ZaraQatar University Pressمجلة كلية الشريعة والدراسات الإسلامية2305-55452523-17152021-06-01391The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorismİbrahim Karataş Purpose: This study aims to reveal how ISIS exploits apocalyptic prophecies stated in the Qur’an and hadiths to find new recruits and legitimize its ideology. The study tries to identify how sensitive issues of Islam are misinterpreted to mislead and terrorize young Muslims. It also elucidates how the misuse of innocent verses and hadiths leads to terrorism in the hands of people with fundamentalist beliefs. Approach: All issues of two ISIS magazines, namely, Dabiq and Rumiyah, were reviewed, and the related articles were selected, examined and compared with traditional Sunni Islam’s eschatology. In addition to the content analysis of the two magazines entitled with the apocalyptic names, previously written literature was also examined for this study. Findings: ISIS used eschatology to persuade Muslim youth to immigrate to its so-called lands and fight for its lofty cause. The terrorist group tried to realize this goal mainly by reinterpreting prophetic promises of Islam for its ends in the media. The analysis shows that ISIS did not serve religion but benefited its radical ideology. However, time has shown that ISIS’s brutal cause was far from the Islamic faith, as none of ISIS’s apocalyptic prophecies came true. Originality: While there are many studies about ISIS, few or none of them analyzed how the movement deceived people with apocalyptic ideas, which need to be considered during an examination of the conflicts in the Middle East, where states (e.g., Israel) or regimes (e.g., Iran) are founded on the basis of apocalyptic prophecies. ISIS was another trial that failed. By not examining the core of ISIS ideology stemming from the distorted interpretation of Islamic prophecies, gray zones would be left in the literature. This study makes that zone clearer. https://journals.qu.edu.qa/index.php/sharia/article/view/1853ApocalypseTerrorismReligionISISPolitics
collection DOAJ
language Arabic
format Article
sources DOAJ
author İbrahim Karataş
spellingShingle İbrahim Karataş
The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
مجلة كلية الشريعة والدراسات الإسلامية
Apocalypse
Terrorism
Religion
ISIS
Politics
author_facet İbrahim Karataş
author_sort İbrahim Karataş
title The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
title_short The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
title_full The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
title_fullStr The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Apocalyptic Prophecies in ISIS Terrorism
title_sort role of apocalyptic prophecies in isis terrorism
publisher Qatar University Press
series مجلة كلية الشريعة والدراسات الإسلامية
issn 2305-5545
2523-1715
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Purpose: This study aims to reveal how ISIS exploits apocalyptic prophecies stated in the Qur’an and hadiths to find new recruits and legitimize its ideology. The study tries to identify how sensitive issues of Islam are misinterpreted to mislead and terrorize young Muslims. It also elucidates how the misuse of innocent verses and hadiths leads to terrorism in the hands of people with fundamentalist beliefs. Approach: All issues of two ISIS magazines, namely, Dabiq and Rumiyah, were reviewed, and the related articles were selected, examined and compared with traditional Sunni Islam’s eschatology. In addition to the content analysis of the two magazines entitled with the apocalyptic names, previously written literature was also examined for this study. Findings: ISIS used eschatology to persuade Muslim youth to immigrate to its so-called lands and fight for its lofty cause. The terrorist group tried to realize this goal mainly by reinterpreting prophetic promises of Islam for its ends in the media. The analysis shows that ISIS did not serve religion but benefited its radical ideology. However, time has shown that ISIS’s brutal cause was far from the Islamic faith, as none of ISIS’s apocalyptic prophecies came true. Originality: While there are many studies about ISIS, few or none of them analyzed how the movement deceived people with apocalyptic ideas, which need to be considered during an examination of the conflicts in the Middle East, where states (e.g., Israel) or regimes (e.g., Iran) are founded on the basis of apocalyptic prophecies. ISIS was another trial that failed. By not examining the core of ISIS ideology stemming from the distorted interpretation of Islamic prophecies, gray zones would be left in the literature. This study makes that zone clearer.
topic Apocalypse
Terrorism
Religion
ISIS
Politics
url https://journals.qu.edu.qa/index.php/sharia/article/view/1853
work_keys_str_mv AT ibrahimkaratas theroleofapocalypticpropheciesinisisterrorism
AT ibrahimkaratas roleofapocalypticpropheciesinisisterrorism
_version_ 1717763791425372160